LITCHFIELD >> A 13-year-old rape victim didn't want to have sex with 18-year-old Edgar Gonzalez and repeatedly told him "no," according to an arrest warrant application released Friday in Litchfield court.

The girl, identified as "Juvenile A," in the affidavit, said "she verbally told Gonzalez that she did not want to have sex, but due to the effects of the marijuana, alcohol and 'the entire situation' [it] just happened anyway."

Charges also involve Gonzalez's fellow Torrington High School senior classmate, Red Raiders football team member and neighbor, Joan Toribio, 18. Both live at 330 Highland Ave., though in separate apartments.

Gonzalez told a detective that he didn't force the victim to have sex with him, though he admitted having sex with the girl. "Both Joan and I knew that these girls were 13 years old and that due to our age being 18, we were not allowed to have sex with them," wrote Gonzalez in a sworn statement.

Toribio's sworn statement reads, "I understand that Juvenile B is now 13 years old and that I was not allowed to have sexual intercourse with her. One of my friends warned me about this prior, but I did not listen to him."

Police and prosecutors are classifying the case as statutory rape, in spite of the victim having told him no. At the end of both sworn statements, both defendants wrote nearly identical apologies. "I am sorry for my actions and this will never happen again," wrote Gonzalez.

According to police affidavits, Gonzalez's and Toribio's charges stem from a Feb. 10 incident at Toribio's Woodland Hills apartment, the night a blizzard dumped 30 inches of snow on Litchfield County.

According to accounts from both 18-year-olds, Toribio's mother was sleeping upstairs at the time the incidents are alleged to have occurred, and they said she was unaware that they were there. Both victims were spending the night at Juvenile A's house, at the time they snuck out, sometime between midnight and 3 a.m. according to separate accounts.

Gonzalez supplied marijuana and snuck vodka from Toribio's mother, according to the two accounts. Juvenile A smoked marijuana, for the first time according to her statements to her mother, and drank alcohol.

In a conversation to her mother, Juvenile A said that "she drank alcohol with Gonzalez, and at one point, Gonzalez told Juvenile A she needed a shot of alcohol. Gonzalez grabbed Juvenile A's head back and poured it into her mouth," according to the warrant.

The victim told her mother she agreed to have oral sex with Gonzalez, but "Gonzalez had [intercourse] with her anyway even though she continued to say no."

Gonzalez, in an interview with Detective Kevin Tieman, told him he had sex with the 13-year-old girl, but it was "not forced in any way."

In the course of the investigation into the alleged incident involving Gonzalez, a sexual assault examination kit was performed on Juvenile A.

More than 20,000 files were downloaded from the two victims and a third juvenile's phone. Police said in the affidavit that analysis of conversations on social media sites "corroborate" the delivering of alcohol and marijuana, and the intercourse between Juvenile A and Gonzalez.

According to police affidavits, the alleged incident first reported to police by Juvenile A's mother on Feb. 11, led police to question Juvenile B. In the affidavit for Gonzalez's arrest, Juvenile A's mother was said to be told by a niece via text that she "needed to talk with her daughter, Juvenile A."

Police described the second victim as "being first reluctant to speak about the sexual intercourse with Joan Toribio," and later saying, "... I ruined his life."

Gonzalez and Toribio were charged and arrested on Feb. 20 and 22 respectively, both with sexual assault in the second degree, risk of injury to a child and risk of injury to a child with illicit sexual contact. Gonzalez and Toribio have both pled "not guilty," to all charges.

Gonzalez is being held at New Haven Correctional Center on $65,100 bond. He is also facing felony robbery and misdemeanor assault charges for what police say was his part in jumping three 14-year-old boys in search of cash. Dennis Bradley Jr., Gonzalez's attorney, will have a chance to argue to lower his client's bond on May 4. Toribio is released on $50,000 professional surety bond and has been expelled from Torrington High School.

Two 17-year-olds were also charged as a result of the initial investigation into alleged incidents. The cases remain sealed because of the 17-year-olds' age.

Neither defense attorneys for Toribio or Gonzalez returned a call for comment.

Torrington Police also did not return a call for comment, regarding earlier statements characterizing the assault as consensual, but statutorily illegal sex.

"It was consensual in the sense that it was not an attack but not consensual in the eyes of the law," said police spokesman Lt. Mike Emanuel at a news conference in March. "Statutorily it's not consensual."

After police arrested Toribio and Gonzalez, area teens took to Twitter to criticize the character of the two victims, calling them "whore," and "snitch."

The matter of cyber-bullying is not being investigated by Torrington Police as a criminal act. Torrington Public Schools officials say they are updating the district's bullying policy to reflect July 2011, and expect to have a draft in May.